Safe and Appropriate Navigation among People for Service Robots

Doctoral student: 
Matteo CIOCCA
Date de soutenance: 
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Supervisors: 
Name: 
Thierry FRAICHARD
Laboratory: 
INRIA/LIG
Name: 
Pierre-Brice WIEBER
Laboratory: 
INRIA/LIG
Summary: 

Motion is a key issue for robots and it has been largely addressed in the past forty years. One important aspect related to motion is motion safety, i.e. the ability for a robot to avoid collision with its environment. This issue becomes critical when considering robots designed to move among and to interact with human beings. When it comes to collision avoidance, the concept of Inevitable Collision States (ICS) is useful. An ICS is a state such that no matter what the future trajectory of a robotic system is, it eventually collides with an object. Robots should never be in one of these ICS. The ICS concept was formally introduced in [1] and later exploited in a number of applications. The ICS concept has so far been used with absolute motion safety in mind, i.e. it is sought to avoid collisions no matter what happens in the environment. In a real environment featuring moving objects whose future behaviour is hard to predict, e.g. people, such a goal cannot be guaranteed. To address this issue, it is interesting to consider weaker motion safety levels. For instance, Ref. [2] has introduced such a weaker motion safety level called Passive Motion Safety: if a collision is inevitable, it is guaranteed that the robot will be at rest (thus mitigating the damage done). The primary purpose of this research project is to further the work done in [2] by considering a robotic platform such as the Pepper robot. Since Pepper is also subject to balance constraints, one problem will be to maintain both balance and no-collision. To that end, the Model Predictive Control framework developed in [3] will be used. The design of more sophisticated motion safety levels will also be explored. [1] Th. Fraichard and H. Asama. Inevitable collision states, a step towards safer robots? Advanced Robotics, 18(10), 2004. [2] S. Bouraine, T. Fraichard, and H. Salhi. Provably safe navigation for mobile robots with limited field-of-views in dynamic environments. Autonomous Robots, 32(3) April 2012. [3] N. Bohórquez et al. Safe navigation strategies for a biped robot walking in a crowd. Humanoids, 2016.